On Fri, Oct 16, 2009 at 6:06 AM, David Schmidt
<david.schmidt.in.dallas at gmail.com> wrote:
> Only if you are VERY close to your local antennas. According to
> antennaweb.org, I'm 27-29 miles from the stations I watch, I got
> analog fine with rabbit ears, but have to re-orient the antenna based
> on which channel is tuned for digital. That obviously doesn't work
> for scheduled recordings!
there is a solution for situations like these but it will cost a bit
of coin, take a while to install, and possibly put you in therapy for
a while, but in the end you'll feel like you're the king of Rube
Goldberg-ian TV solutions. You'll need to install an external HD
(just get an old UHF antenna and save a few bucks) antenna on the
roof. And onto that, you'll need to gang a rotor mount, one that
comes with an IR-based control unit. Using IR blasting from Myth, you
can send the compass direction or pre-programmed (by you, of course)
arbitrary channel number to the rotor control unit as part of your
recording sequence.
I might find myself in this situation once I finally go totally OTA
for my local digital TV. Luckily I have the rotor mount and control
unit installed. Unluckily, the current antenna I have is not for HD
and I don't have an IR blaster unit on my OrigenAE box. No sane
person would ever go through something like this. But hey, we're
MythTV enthusiasts and I think we qualify as a different category :-)
-M